This introduces the `g o d` text object for comparing regions. It works
like evil-exchange. Select two regions in sequence with `g o d` and an
ediff buffer of the selections will pop up.
Signed-off-by: Rudi Grinberg <me@rgrinberg.com>
This can be used to extract paths from evil-ex style paths. e.g. the
following inserts the stdout into the current buffer (assuming we're in
~/some/project/filename.c):
:R!echo %:P ~/some/project
:R!echo %:t filename.c
:R!echo %:e c
:R!echo %:r filename
:R!echo ~/another/project/%:t:r.h
~/another/project/filename.h
:R % contents of current file
http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/cmdline.html#filename-modifiers
has a full list of vim filename modifiers. Doom doesn't support all of
them, but it does support most of them.
Focus-on-split is being disabled to achieve vim parity. The advice is
still necessary to ensure splitting updates the window buffer list, so
operations like winner-undo undoes correctly.
To match vim's behavior, when splitting windows. The
+evil-window-split-a and +evil-window-vsplit-a advice are still
necessary to preserve proper "window focus" order.
Keybinds that correct behavior or provide or extend vim functionality
were moved to their respective modules, or to the :editor evil module.
Keybinds in the global space, that are particularly opinionated but
potentially harmful or imposing as a default, or likely for users to
change (like leader keys), are kept in config/default.
Adds `+word-wrap-text-modes`, a list of modes which shouldn't get any
extra indentation. This is used for text and markdown modes, which
should just indent to the parent depth.
Adds `+word-wrap-visual-modes`, a list of modes which shouldn't enable
`adaptive-wrap-prefix-mode`. This is used to fix the prefix indentation
in `org-mode`, which provides its own implementation.
Tweaks the indent behaviour to treat strings the same as comments so
they don't receive additional indentation.